NIH-lobby Type post Date April 7, 2025 CategoriesBioethicsMedicineScientific Freedom Tagged , academic freedom, Anthony Fauci, COVID-19, epidemiologists, Francis Collins, free speech, health policy, Honestly, Jay Bhattacharya, Khaleda Rahman, Lawrence D. Bobo, lockdowns, Maya Sulkin, National Institutes of Health, National Institutes of Heath, Newsweek, Real Clear Politics, Scott Atlas, The Free Press, The New England Journal of Medicine, Washington Post, Wesley J. Smith At NIH, Bhattacharya Wants to Restore Open Inquiry Science and Culture April 7, 2025 Bioethics, Medicine, Scientific Freedom 5 Restoring open discussion is certainly worth a try. Science advances more from doubt than from certainty. Read More ›
U.S._Capitol,_Washington,_D.C.,_West_View_20110826_1 Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date March 5, 2025 CategoriesBioethicsEthicsMedicine Tagged , accountability, bureaucrats, children, Congress, COVID-19, deaths, Declaration of Independence, Democrats, English, experts, Hoover Institution, Humanize, Jay Bhattacharya, leadership, liberty, lockdowns, National Institutes of Health, pandemic, Republicans, Scott Atlas, Stanford University, vaccine, vaccine mandates, viruses, Wall Street Journal, Washington DC, Washington State, Wesley J. Smith Let’s Not Forget About That Covid Commission David Klinghoffer March 5, 2025 Bioethics, Ethics, Medicine 5 When speaking of the disaster that began to unfold in 2020, do you refer to it as the Covid “pandemic” or the Covid “lockdowns and vaccine mandates”? Read More ›
WhSouthLawn Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date May 16, 2020 CategoriesMedicine Tagged , Biola University, Center for Science and Culture, coronavirus, COVID-19, Douglas Axe, economics, Jay Bhattacharya, John Ioannidis, lockdown, Rockefeller University, Scott Atlas, Stanford University Medical Center, Stephen Meyer, The Federalist, White House Stephen Meyer: Teach the (Coronavirus) Controversy David Klinghoffer May 16, 2020 Medicine 4 Students and Presidents make better decisions when they are exposed to competing views. Read More ›